Analysis

ISA standard set to become standard open architecture

14th July 2016
Daisy Stapley-Bunten
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It has been announced that Ted Speers, Head of Product Architecture and Planning for its SoC business unit, has been appointed to the inaugural board of directors of the RISC-V Foundation by Microsemi Corporation. The nonprofit formally introduced Speers and six other board members at the fourth annual RISC-V Workshop, held at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts 12th-13th July, 2016.

RISC-V (pronounced “risk-five”) is a new Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) that was originally designed to support computer architecture research and education, and is now set to become a standard open architecture under the governance of the RISC-V Foundation. RISC-V is designed to be scalable for a wide variety of applications, easy to implement with regard to size and power, and offered under a permissive Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) open source license. Under the leadership of Speers and his fellow board members, the foundation is working to ensure the ISA becomes the industry standard for all computing devices, which will support continued growth of IoT applications. 

“RISC-V’s new ISA was designed initially to support computer architecture research and education, and has now found many more uses in the real world. Our goal is to provide a free and open clean-slate designed ISA that is simple, yet supports extensibility and specialisation,” said David A. Patterson, Pardee Professor of Computer Science at UC Berkeley, where the RISC-V ISA was developed. “We are excited to see leading semiconductor companies using RISC-V to offer highly differentiated solutions to emerging markets.”

Through Microsemi’s early involvement in the creation of the RISC-V Foundation, Microsemi has an established leadership role in the emerging standard and ecosystem. Evidence of that involvement was on display at the 13th July RISC-V Workshop, where Microsemi collaborated with other companies in a “Hands-On RISC-V Tutorial Session.”

“When we first came across RISC-V, we knew it was going to be a great fit as a compelling soft processor solution for Microsemi’s low power, reliable, secure FPGA roadmap,” said Speers. “The vision of the team behind RISC-V, which includes some of the most respected computer architects in the world, was compelling. We also saw RISC-V as a great fit for implementing clean-slate processor capabilities for security, trust and reliability that are not only central to Microsemi’s industrial and defence markets, but will be central to the emerging IoT market. With the early support of companies including Google, IBM, HP and NVIDIA, in addition to Microsemi, it is now evident there is strong disruptive potential for RISC-V in the rapidly evolving data centre market.”

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